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One of the best sources of information available to investors is a company’s 10-K. Found on a company’s Investor Relation page or on the SEC’s EDGAR database, a 10-K is essentially a comprehensive report on the state of the company. Despite how easy it is to access this information, I believe that not enough investors read them to gain a better understanding of how a company operates and their risks.

One section of a 10-K is dedicated to the risks that management is worried about. Some of these risks are obvious, such as banks being worried about another financial crisis, and shipping companies being worried about higher gas prices or economic downturns, but some are things that investors should actually be worried about. Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is a company that many investors are obviously not worried about–given that is has a forward P/E ratio of around 3,000, investors are clearly willing to forgo earnings now based on the faith that what Amazon is doing will work. These are some things that Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is worried about that I think investors are not thinking about when they pay $255 for a share of Amazon based on the hope that the company will eventually stop spending and become highly profitable.

This is probably the risk that most who are bearish about Amazon focus on. Amazon currently pays states taxes in California, Texas, Washington, North Dakota, Kansas, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and New York. South Carolina will collect taxes from Amazon in January of 2016, Nevada in January of 2014, Indiana in January of 2014, Tennessee in January of 2014, Virginia in September of 2013, and New Jersey in July of 2013. Amazon has sought to offset some of the costs of these new taxes by experimenting with one day delivery, but these new taxes will no doubt harm Amazon, which has long prided itself on offering the lowest prices on many products. Amazon is really concerned about this, as they have begun negotiating with some states for deals that would essentially trade jobs for not collecting taxes. For example, in my home state of South Carolina Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) agreed to open a distribution center near Columbia that would employ 1,200 people in exchange for a five year exemption from the state collecting taxes. The South Carolina legislature rejected this deal, and Amazon countered with an offer of 2,000 jobs, which was ultimately accepted. So in the relatively small state of South Carolina, Amazon was willing to commit 800 perhaps-unnecessary jobs in exchange for not having to collect sales tax in a state with four million people.

“We Could Be Liable for Fraudulent or Unlawful Activities of Sellers”

I think that this is a particularly interesting risk that Amazon management is worried about. Amazon seller programs have little control over what is sold on Amazon, and under Amazon’s “A2Z” guarantee, Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) reimburses buyers on purchases for things that Amazon sellers never shipped, or when the products shipped are “materially different from the sellers’ descriptions.” Amazon expects its marketplace program to grow, and with it, the cost of the guarantee program, even enough to impact operating results per the 10-K. In 2012, for example, animal rights groups found 147 products being sold by Amazon that contained illegal whale meat. As Amazon’s Marketplace continues to grow, I would expect that more and more headlines like this could start popping up and become a problem for Amazon.

“We Have a Rapidly Evolving Business Model and Our Stock Price Is Highly Volatile.”

Some risks listed are simply there because they have to be included, like this one. While the volatility is a risk for some investors, I would bet that most investors are bullish on Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) because of their rapidly evolving business model, not in spite of it. I was short Amazon for a short period about a month ago, but because I enjoy my sleep, I covered my short. Amazon’s extraordinary P/E ratio is proof that many investors believe strongly in the company, and are not really worried about the risks–but I currently believe that there is more downside than upside to Amazon, at least for the time being. Shorting Amazon isn’t for the faint of heart, but I think that owners of the stock should be more worried about it than most are.

The Competition

One of the main reason I believe that investors have not priced these risks into Amazon’s stock price is that there is very little competition in the space. For example, do you think that Best Buy Co., Inc. (NYSE:BBY) could really take market share away from Amazon? And eBay Inc (NASDAQ:EBAY) is a good company, but it does not have nearly the same delivery system as Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), and they are really not competing on the same stage.